Srpska Gazeta in 1838: How Russia made Slavic states on Albanian territories

Srpska Gazeta in 1838: How Russia made Slavic states on Albanian territories

Authored by Qazim Namani. Translation: Petrit Latifi.

The role of Russia in the formation of Slavic states in Albanian lands.

Since the beginning of the 18th century, when Russia supported Prince Danilo, and later Njegoš, through Sima Sarajlia, it made him a member of the Paris and Vienna Club Society, which was initially founded by the Poles and Prussians. Sima Sarajlia brought the myth of the Battle of Kosovo 1389 as a propaganda program. Sarajlia came to Cetinje in 1827, and for the first time in Montenegro, he mentioned the word Serb and Serbia.

The Orthodox population was supported in all forms by Russia.
At the time of the Tanzimat reforms, Russian propaganda was at a very high level through Qartkovski and Danilevski, who saw the Patriarch of Russia as the first god on earth.

It was also the period of the formation of modern Slavic and Greek states in Albanian lands. Serbia as a modern state was a Russian project, uniting the Orthodox of ethnic groups such as Albanians, Vlachs, Chinchers, Bulgarians, Greeks, Romanians and Catholic volunteers who supported the movement for the expulsion of the Ottoman Empire from southeastern Europe.

This platform under the full control of Russia was made public in 1844 with the projects. Serbian Nacertanjen, Greek Megalo idea and Bulgarian Otoqensvon. In this facsimile you can see Russia’s gifts to the Montenegrins. Food from Russia arrived as a gift to the Montenegrins.

Reference

Srpska gazeta, 1838.

Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning
Warning
Warning
Warning.

© All publications and posts on Balkanacademia.com are copyrighted. Author: Petrit Latifi. You may share and use the information on this blog as long as you credit “Balkan Academia” and “Petrit Latifi” and add a link to the blog.